You can't. I do believe, however, that in Excel 2000, there was a way to get to a flight simulator in the credits menu. I am almost positive that they removed that from all later versions (2003, 2007, and 2010).
Yes, Office Basic has Word, Excel and Outlook
If you mean a Microsoft operating system, such as XP or Vista or Windows 7, then on an IBM PC, it does need to be running before Excel can run. You can also get Excel for other types of computers that do not use a Windows operating system, such as an Apple computer, and Excel can run on those. So it depends on the type of computer and the version of Excel.
If you opened a spreadsheet, you will be running a software program. If you use Microsoft Windows, it will probably be Excel.
The programs included with Microsoft Office Live are Microsoft Word, Microsoft Excel and Microsoft Powerpoint. The minimum system requirement for Windows to run these programs is Windows XP and for Mac it is Mac OS X 10.2.
The standard desktop applications of Microsoft Word, Microsoft Excel and Microsoft Outlook will not run if you download them onto a Windows XP or Vista machine. It needs at least Windows 7.
There are many programs that run on Windows. Within Microsoft Office, where you find Excel and Powerpoint, you also have programs like Word, Access and Outlook.
It depends on what aspects you are using. Elements on the cloud are ok, but the standard desktop applications of Microsoft Word, Microsoft Excel and Microsoft Outlook will not run if you download them onto a Windows XP machine.
Excel is a type of applications software/. All applications software need an operating system to run on. Different types of computer will have different operating systems. Most commonly Excel is run on one of the Windows operating systems like XP, Vista, 7 or 2000. The version of Excel you have will determine what operating systems it can run on. Excel can also run on other types of computers that do not have a Windows operating system, like a Macintosh.
No, Mac Office, which includes software like Microsoft Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and others, is designed specifically for macOS operating system. It won't run natively on a Windows PC. However, Microsoft offers Office for Windows, which provides similar functionality and compatibility with Windows-based systems. If you need Office applications on a Windows PC, you'll want to download and install the Windows version of Microsoft Office.
Microsoft released the first version of Excel for the Mac in 1985, and the first Windows version (numbered 2.05 to line up with the Mac and bundled with a run-time Windows environment) in November 1987.
Columns are vertical cells (they run up and down).
Yes.